taking the oath in front of the Parliament near the President of the Chamber of Deputies
Pietro Ingrao on 9 July 1978 The extremely disputed
Giovanni Leone's presidency came to an end in June 1978 due to allegations made in the
United States over Lockheed bribing a number of high-profile politicians in Italy to purchase Hercules Aircraft for the military. Even if the accusation was never proved, Leone decided to resign in order to prevent the beginning of the so called "white semester" (
semestre bianco), the six months period before the end of a presidential mandate during which the President cannot dissolve the Parliament and call a general election. Leone's resignation came during a very difficult moment for the
Italian Republic. Tight in the grip of the
Years of Lead and of the
strategy of tension, the country had suffered major terrorist attacks during the decade, such as
1974 Piazza della Loggia bombing and
1974 Italicus Express bombing. The climax of tension came in March 1978, when the former Prime Minister
Aldo Moro was
kidnapped and killed by a unit of the militant far-left organisation known as the
Red Brigades while on his way to a session of the
Chamber of Deputies where a discussion was to take place regarding a vote of confidence for a new government that would have had for the first time ever the support of the
Italian Communist Party. Politically, Moro's stance to find an accommodation between the
Christian Democracy and the
Italian Communist Party was a way to lead the country out of the tensions and to make the republic institutions more solid and stable as response to domestic terrorism. The
Historic Compromise was made possible by the new course inaugurated by the new communist leader
Enrico Berlinguer, who in 1973 launched in communist magazine
Rinascita a proposal for a "democratic alliance" with
Christian Democracy in order to prevent a coup d'état similar to the
Chilean one. However, the sudden death of Moro was a hard blow to the Historical Compromise politics and a major defeat for the republic institutions in front of the public opinion. In that context, in summer 1978 the
Italian Parliament convened to elect a new President. After
1976 general election, the left-wing parties together detained now a narrow majority in both houses of the Parliament and claimed the next President must have been a leftist one. After a long negotiation, the parties of the so-called "constitutional arch" (
arco costituzionale), an expression used to indicate all the democratic parties represented in Parliament with the exception of the neo-fascist
Italian Social Movement, found a deal on the name of the popular socialist lawmaker and former partisan
Sandro Pertini. On 8 July 1978 Pertini was finally elected President with the largest majority ever obtained in an Italian presidential election and sworn in as the new President one day after. ==Results==